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Skeletal bone morphology is resistant to the high amplitude seasonal leptin cycle in the Siberian hamster

Skeletal bone morphology is resistant to the high amplitude seasonal leptin cycle in the Siberian hamster
Skeletal bone morphology is resistant to the high amplitude seasonal leptin cycle in the Siberian hamster
Recent studies have suggested that the adipocyte-derived hormone, leptin, plays a role in the regulation of metabolism. Here, we tested this hypothesis in the seasonally breeding Siberian hamster, as this species exhibits profound seasonal changes in adiposity and circulating leptin concentrations driven by the annual photoperiodic cycle. Male hamsters were kept in either long (LD) or short (SD) photoperiods. Following exposure to short photoperiods for 8 weeks animals exhibited a significant weight-loss and a 16-fold reduction of serum leptin concentrations. At Week 9, animals in both photoperiods were infused with leptin or PBS via osmotic mini-pump for 14 days. Chronic leptin infusion mimicked LD-like concentrations in SD-housed animals and caused a further decline in body weight and adipose tissue. In LD-housed animals, leptin infusion resulted in a significant elevation of serum concentrations above natural LD-like levels, but had no discernable effect on body weight or overall adiposity. Both bending and compression characteristics and histomorphometric measurements of trabecular bone mass were unaltered by leptin treatment or photoperiod. Our data therefore show that despite a high natural amplitude cycle of leptin, this hormone has no apparent role in the regulation of bone metabolism, and therefore do not support recent propositions that this hormone is an important component in the metabolism of bone tissue.
475-479
Rousseau, K.
08b2d289-99f8-465f-a519-a323fec4e858
Atcha, Z.
428fe328-a9ae-4a45-9c4a-f241bcf44eb9
Denton, J.
475c3140-4930-486a-a89b-0a8ce147b3a3
Cagampang, F.R.
7cf57d52-4a65-4554-8306-ed65226bc50e
Ennos, A.R.
38156c5d-7706-46bc-9615-d50f2cc12394
Freemont, A.J.
1c5fb501-09c1-4882-a3fc-4cdffcb47f59
Loudon, A.S.
877c6061-fbe6-4561-9da5-ccafa0cb724c
Rousseau, K.
08b2d289-99f8-465f-a519-a323fec4e858
Atcha, Z.
428fe328-a9ae-4a45-9c4a-f241bcf44eb9
Denton, J.
475c3140-4930-486a-a89b-0a8ce147b3a3
Cagampang, F.R.
7cf57d52-4a65-4554-8306-ed65226bc50e
Ennos, A.R.
38156c5d-7706-46bc-9615-d50f2cc12394
Freemont, A.J.
1c5fb501-09c1-4882-a3fc-4cdffcb47f59
Loudon, A.S.
877c6061-fbe6-4561-9da5-ccafa0cb724c

Rousseau, K., Atcha, Z., Denton, J., Cagampang, F.R., Ennos, A.R., Freemont, A.J. and Loudon, A.S. (2005) Skeletal bone morphology is resistant to the high amplitude seasonal leptin cycle in the Siberian hamster. Journal of Endocrinology, 186 (3), 475-479. (doi:10.1677/joe.1.06207).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Recent studies have suggested that the adipocyte-derived hormone, leptin, plays a role in the regulation of metabolism. Here, we tested this hypothesis in the seasonally breeding Siberian hamster, as this species exhibits profound seasonal changes in adiposity and circulating leptin concentrations driven by the annual photoperiodic cycle. Male hamsters were kept in either long (LD) or short (SD) photoperiods. Following exposure to short photoperiods for 8 weeks animals exhibited a significant weight-loss and a 16-fold reduction of serum leptin concentrations. At Week 9, animals in both photoperiods were infused with leptin or PBS via osmotic mini-pump for 14 days. Chronic leptin infusion mimicked LD-like concentrations in SD-housed animals and caused a further decline in body weight and adipose tissue. In LD-housed animals, leptin infusion resulted in a significant elevation of serum concentrations above natural LD-like levels, but had no discernable effect on body weight or overall adiposity. Both bending and compression characteristics and histomorphometric measurements of trabecular bone mass were unaltered by leptin treatment or photoperiod. Our data therefore show that despite a high natural amplitude cycle of leptin, this hormone has no apparent role in the regulation of bone metabolism, and therefore do not support recent propositions that this hormone is an important component in the metabolism of bone tissue.

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Published date: 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 25958
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/25958
PURE UUID: 98ef95de-cf52-4838-a2f6-f6bd7de817de
ORCID for F.R. Cagampang: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4404-9853

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Date deposited: 12 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:29

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Contributors

Author: K. Rousseau
Author: Z. Atcha
Author: J. Denton
Author: F.R. Cagampang ORCID iD
Author: A.R. Ennos
Author: A.J. Freemont
Author: A.S. Loudon

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